Regarding what Chris and Speco said above, while it is all true, it is not necessarily always true all at the same time.
Yes, superheated steam has sensible heat that has to be removed prior to condensation, assuming condensing is the goal, where, as you state, the latent heat of the steam is recovered at rapid heat transfer rates. The question of heat transfer rate is the problem.
Heat transfer takes surface area, and the higher the heat transfer rate, the lower the surface area required. That's the basics.
Some heat exchangers, such as power plant feed water heaters (FWH) are compelled to have to handle superheated steam before condensation can occur, due to the conditions at the turbine extraction point. These higher pressure FWH's have a dedicated zone in them called the desuperheating zone (DSH) that are secifically and carefully designed to do this with the least amount of surface area possible, as the condensing zone is really where it is at, and surface area costs money.
In order to maximize heat transfer, in this area of the heater the velocities are very very high. Reynolds number is a dimensionless heat transfer parameter that is a function of velocity, among others. As a basic saying, for sensible heat transfer, (convection) the higher the reynolds number, the better and faster the heat transfer.
Hence FWH's are designed to have very high reynolds numbers, so high in fact that vibration caused by hydrodynamic swirl, or whip of the tubing excited by the velocity becomes the limiting factor for DSH design. The highest heat transfer coefficient that I am accoustomed to seeing in DSH's is in the 160 btu/hr-ft^2/F range at best, which is not very high, compared to condensing rates in excess of 500.
Now, consider a Hx that is not specifically designed for convection heat transfer, meaning that the velocities are not very high, favoring low pressure drop in order to get the saturated steam in and exposed to all the heat transfer surface, and the htc steam side plummets rapidly. I recently figured a Roberts type sugar evaporator, both by hand calculations, and using
and found that the OHTC (low reynolds numbers tube side also due to subcooled juice) at conditions was 52, compared to a decent average of 450 when the steam finally got cool enough to condense in the back side of the calandria.
Bottom line was that a lot of the available surface of the evaporator was devoted to desuperheating, instead of sugar juice boiling.
Superheat in this case robbed the evaporator of a lot of available capacity, and put a large percentage of its surface area to doing low grade heat transfer.
25362, except for the fact that there is at least a little delta F in the sensible heat transfer, superheat has a "blanketing" effect, acting much like NC gases, especially in surface condensers, where SH steam was never anticipated to be.
Bottom line; if you can get the steam to saturation before it enters the Hx, the better the heat transfer.